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A prep wrestling coach has accused Notre Dame football coach Marcus Freeman of battery following an incident at a high school meet on Jan. 3.

The South Bend Tribune, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported on Sunday, Jan. 11, that New Prairie (Indiana) High School assistant wrestling coach Chris Fleeger filed a police report last week alleging Freeman made physical contact with him in a hallway after Freeman’s son Vinny — a senior at Penn High School — lost his match.

According to the Tribune, Freeman, his son and Penn head coach Brad Harper were leaving the gym when Fleeger allegedly began exchanging words with the group. Per the Tribune, Fleeger and Freeman’s wife Joanna ‘engaged in a shouting match’ before local law enforcement officers and school officials separated everyone.

‘Vinny Freeman, head coach Marcus Freeman’s son, was verbally accosted during and after his wrestling match by a local wrestling coach. Marcus and Joanna Freeman intervened and removed Vinny from the situation,’ Notre Dame said in a statement. ‘At no point did Coach Freeman physically engage with anyone. We believe that the police report, which includes video evidence, fully exonerates Coach Freeman and makes clear these accusations are totally unfounded.’

Mishawaka (Indiana) Police investigated and turned over the completed report to the prosecutor’s office to determine if any charges will be filed.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SACRAMENTO ― The Sacramento Kings ended their seven-game losing streak for their first win, and first lit beam, of 2026 in a 111-98 victory against the Houston Rockets at Golden 1 Center on Sunday, Jan. 11.

Sacramento fans walked away with free pizza and a sighting of their purple beam that shoots into the air from Golden 1 Center with each win, something that has been a rare sight during the 2025-26 season.

The Kings were led by DeMar DeRozan, who became the 23rd player in NBA history to reach 26,000 career points after a 14-foot fadeaway jumper with 7:09 remaining in the second quarter. DeRozan ended the game with a team-high 22 points, while shooting 8-of-13 (61%) from the field.

‘It’s always satisfying getting a win,’ DeRozan told reporters after the game about scoring his 26,000th point. ‘I think as far as everything else, scoring and points, I think that really won’t hit me until it’s all said and done.’

Sacramento received contributions from everywhere. Guard Zach LaVine finished with 18 points. Russell Westbrook added 15 points, six rebounds and 10 assists in the win. Maxime Raynaud notched a double-double with 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Malik Monk, who had been previously in and out the rotation, saw 26 minutes off the bench against the Rockets and scored 15 points.

‘That’s kind of been my role since I’ve been in the NBA, being a backup ballhandler and taking the pressure off the point, the first group so I was out there flowing and free. It felt good though,’ Monk said.

He received a loud standing ovation when he was first subbed into the game off the bench.

‘It takes a lot of weight off my shoulders,’ Monk told USA TODAY Sports about his warm welcome from the fans. ‘I can go out there and miss two, three shots in a row and the fans (are) still going to be on my side. So it’s always good to get a win in front of the fans. It’s always good to go out there and perform like I did today.’

The Kings got bursts of energy whenever rookie center Dylan Cardwell stepped on the floor. He hustled, grabbed rebounds, finished under the rim and hyped up the crowd nearly every chance he got.

Cardwell finished with nine points and 10 rebounds in 19 minutes. He was even selected to light the Kings’ victory beam at the end of the game, and still then he was hyping the crowd up.

After the game, King coach Doug Christie smiled and told USA TODAY Sports that Cardwell is ‘the spirit animal.’

‘Dylan is a special young man. He has an energy about him,’ Christie said. ‘Whenever we talk basketball, whether it’s me sitting down with him showing him film or him coming up and saying ‘coach, let me have it, what you got for me, how can I get better?’ Those are moments that you just, as a coach, I personally love because there’s teaching, there’s communication.’

He added: ‘Watching him rebound the basketball, play with joy, physicality, I think our team is confident when he’s protecting the paint. I know from being a player that when you have somebody back there protecting the paint it allows you on the perimeter to be a little more aggressive and he continues to impress.’

The Rockets were led by guard Amen Thompson as he scored 31 points, including 16 in the third quarter.

Rockets forward Kevin Durant finished with 23. Alperen Sengun had 19 points and nine rebound for Houston.

The Kings play the Los Angeles Lakers at Golden 1 Center on Monday, Jan. 12. Tip-off is 7 p.m. PT (10 p.m. ET).

‘The win is for the team,’ Christie told USA TODAY Sports. ‘I take all the shots. As soon as I walk out of here, I’m thinking about the Lakers. I love it and appreciate it but it’s on to the next.’

Kings vs. Rockets highlights

Game recap

Kings were behind by a point, 23-22, after the first quarter.

Zach LaVine led the Kings in the first period, scoring eight points. The Kings had five first quarter turnovers for eight points.

Kevin Durant had seven points in opening period for Houston. Rockets center Alperen Sengun had five points in the first quarter.

Sacramento made it a back-and-forth affair in the second quarter with the Rockets.

There were a couple of standout moments in the second.

DeRozan had his milestone moment with 7:09 in the second quarter, surpassing 26,000 points in his NBA career, the 23rd player in NBA history to do so.

Minutes later, Kings guard Malik Monk brought the house down, electrifying the Golden 1 Center crowd with a thunderous slam as he rose over the top of Rockets center Alperen Sengun for two with 4:34 in the second period.

The Kings settled in the game and had zero turnovers in the second period. They turned their defense up, forcing the Rockets to commit four turnovers in the quarter.

DeRozan had 13 points in the first half after hitting a baseline fadeaway at the end of the first half. The Kings went into the locker room holding on to a narrow, 51-48, lead after 24 minutes.

Sacramento made attempts to pull away from Houston as LaVine and DeRozan combined for 14 points in the third.

However, the Rockets were carried in the third quarter by Amen Thompson. He scored 16 points in the period. He, too, had a monstrous dunk in the game, going down the lane over Kings rookie Dylan Cardwell.

Things got physical with 40 seconds remaining in the third quarter as Cardwell and Rockets forward Dorian Finney-Smith were jockeying for position on a rebound when Finney-Smith shoved Cardwell who had just leaped airborne for the board.

Players had to be separated after a brief confrontation that resulted in a Finney-Smith flagrant one penalty and a technical foul assessed to Monk.

DeRozan followed with a mid-range shot through contact and made the awarded free throw. The Kings led 78-76 after the third quarter.

The Kings continued to pour it on in the fourth quarter. Monk hit back-to-back 3s to give the Kings some life as the Rockets kept with them.

No moment was probably bigger for the Sacramento fans than when Sengun missed consecutive free throws with 4:49 left in the fourth quarter, awarding Kings fans with free pizza.

Westbrook knocked down a 3-pointer with two minutes left in the game to give the Kings a 107-94 lead.

Sacramento would hang on to the win the game, 111-98.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The college football transfer portal remains open until Jan. 16, with an extra five-day window (Jan. 20-24) for teams playing in the national championship.

Thousands of players remain available. We’ll keep you posted with daily live updates of portal commitments.

Transfers by conference: SEC | Big Ten | ACC | Big 12

HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATES.

Today’s CFB transfer portal commitments

QB

  • Braden Atkinson: Mercer to Oregon State
  • Tayven Jackson: UCF to North Texas
  • Deuce Knight: Auburn to Ole Miss
  • Ajani Sheppard: Washington State to Temple
  • Davin Wydner: West Georgia to Louisville
  • Walker White: Baylor to Central Arkansas
  • Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi: Colorado State to Michigan
  • Deshawn Purdie: Wake Forest to Liberty
  • Landen Clark: Elon to LSU

RB

  • Brendan Haygood: Missouri to North Texas
  • Datrell Jones: Boston College to Holy Cross
  • Rodney Nelson: Monmouth to Miami (Ohio)
  • Hollywood Smothers: NC State to Texas (after flipping previous commitment to Alabama)
  • L.J. Phillips: South Dakota to Iowa
  • Chris Johnson Jr.: SMU to Clemson
  • Cedric Baxter Jr.: Texas to Kentucky
  • Jabree Coleman: Penn State to South Carolina

WR

  • Kai Black: Iowa State to Northern Iowa
  • Tristan Gardner: Missouri State to Coastal Carolina
  • Reginald Vick Jr.: Wake Forest to Colorado State
  • Jackson Voth: Drake to Louisville
  • Ny Carr: Miami to Wake Forest
  • Zion Ragins: Oklahoma to Mississippi State
  • Cam Vaughn: West Virginia to Miami
  • Cam Coleman: Auburn to Texas
  • Mackenzie Alleyne: Washington State to Oklahoma
  • Jaime Ffrench: Texas to Michigan
  • Xavier Townsend: Iowa State to Purdue
  • Lawayne McCoy: Florida State to Louisville
  • Chris Marshall: Boise State to Arkansas
  • Isaiah Horton: Alabama to Texas A&M

TE

  • Cameron Kossman: Florida to Boston College
  • Jelani Thurman: Ohio State to North Carolina
  • Randy Pittman: Florida State to SMU
  • Josh Sapp: Clemson to West Virginia
  • Andrew Olesh: Penn State to Oregon
  • Luke Reynolds: Penn State to Virginia Tech
  • Kylan Fox: UCF to Purdue

OL

  • Jaquez Joiner: UCF to Marshall
  • Sean Na’a: Arizona State to UCLA
  • Micah DeBose: Alabama to Vanderbilt
  • Nate Hale: San Jose State to Arizona
  • Seth Smith: Northern Arizona to South Carolina
  • Mario Nash: Florida State to Mississippi State
  • Jireh Moe: San Jose State to Utah
  • Alec Johnson: Georgia State to Western Kentucky

DL

  • Justin Benton: East Carolina to North Texas
  • Harvey Dyson: Tulane to NC State
  • Jayden Fry: Boston College to Sam Houston
  • Jaden Jones: Florida State to Missouri
  • Sahir West: James Madison to UCLA
  • Syrdir Mitchell: LSU to Wake Forest
  • Zavion Hardy: South Carolina to Baylor
  • Brian Allen: Iowa to Vanderbilt
  • Kelby Collins: Alabama to South Carolina
  • Tommy Ziesmer: Eastern Kentucky to Louisville
  • CJ Wesley: Howard to Clemson
  • Lavon Johnson: Texas to Maryland
  • Angelo McCullom: Illinois to Texas A&M
  • Cortez Harris: Penn State to Virginia Tech
  • Mylachi Williams: Penn State to Virginia Tech
  • Donta Simpson: Miami to Missouri
  • Eliyt Nairne: Tulane to Pitt
  • Sedrick Smith: Maryland to Colorado
  • Achilles Woods: South Alabama to LSU
  • Vili Taufatofua: San Jose State to Colorado

LB

  • Elijah Barnes: Texas to Kentucky
  • Rashad Henry: UMass to UCF
  • Derek McDonald: Syracuse to North Carolina

DB

  • Boo Carter: Tennessee to Colorado
  • Victor Evans III: FIU to Nebraska
  • Jaylen Heyward: UCF to Arkansas State
  • Cyrus Reyes: Mississippi State to Kentucky
  • CJ Richard: Illinois State to Florida State
  • Donovan Saunders: Utah to Purdue
  • Tony Williams: UCF to Kennesaw State
  • Earl Little Jr.: Florida State to Ohio State
  • Daniel Cobbs: Kansas State to Baylor
  • Carson Williams: Montana State to Indiana
  • Mark Manfred III: Missouri to Kentucky
  • Nazir Ward: Western Kentucky to Syracuse
  • Dwight Bootle: Charlotte to Arizona
  • Taebron Bennie-Powell: Notre Dame to Boise State
  • Randon Fontenette: Vanderbilt to Colorado
  • Ian Williams: Memphis to Arkansas
  • Ricardo Jones: Clemson to Vanderbilt

K

P

  • Caleb McGrath: Minnesota to North Dakota State

LS

  • Conlan Greene: Temple to Youngstown State

College football 2026 transfer portal dates: When does transfer portal close?

The portal period now runs from Jan. 2-16, with an extra five-day window (Jan. 20-24) for teams playing in the national championship. The spring portal window in April is no longer a part of the schedule, so January is the only open window for teams to add via the portal in 2026.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The setup for the second weekend of the NFL playoffs is coming into focus.

Before the divisional round can be fully set, however, more pieces of wild-card weekend will have to fall into place. The NFC configuration is now in place, with the the Los Angeles Rams, who outlasted the Carolina Panthers, set to face the Chicago Bears, who pushed past the Green Bay Packers. The top-seeded Seattle Seahawks, meanwhile, will host the San Francisco 49ers, who knocked off the defending-champion Philadelphia Eagles.

But the AFC still remains up in the air heading into Sunday night.

Here’s the latest on what we know about the NFL divisional-round schedule:

NFL playoff divisional-round schedule

Jan. 17

  • TBD at TBD
  • TBD at TBD

Jan. 18

  • TBD at TBD
  • TBD at TBD

NFL conference championship game schedule

Jan. 25

  • AFC championship, TBD
  • NFC championship, TBD

Super Bowl 60 schedule

Feb. 8

AFC champion vs. NFC champion, NBC

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Iran is not merely experiencing another wave of street protests. It is facing a crisis that strikes at the core of the Islamic Republic—and, for the first time in years, places the regime’s survival in real doubt.

Across Iran, demonstrations sparked by economic collapse and corruption have rapidly transformed into direct challenges to clerical rule. Security forces have responded with live fire, mass arrests, and communications blackouts. International reporting cites hundreds of people killed and thousands detained. Internet shutdowns point to a regime determined to suppress not only dissent, but proof of it.

Iran has behaved this way before. What has changed is the strategic environment—and the growing sense among Iranians that the system itself is failing.

Still, one must be clear-eyed: Iran’s leaders will not go quietly. They do not see themselves as ordinary autocrats clinging to power. In their own theology, they see themselves as executing Allah’s will.

A Regime That Sees Repression as Divine Duty

Since 1979, the Islamic Republic has framed its authority through velayat-e faqih—the rule of the Islamic jurist. Under this doctrine, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is not simply a political figure. He is the guardian of an Islamic revolution believed to be divinely sanctioned.

That theological worldview directly shapes how the regime responds to dissent. When Iranian security forces fire into crowds, the regime does not see itself as suppressing political opposition; it sees itself as crushing heresy, sedition, and rebellion against God’s order. Protesters are routinely labeled ‘corrupt on earth,’ a Quranic phrase historically used to justify severe punishment.

Public condemnation and moral appeals alone will not move Tehran. Its rulers believe endurance, sacrifice, and violence are virtues—especially when used to preserve the revolution.

Even regimes driven by religious certainty can collapse once their power structures fracture.

Why this moment differs from 2009—or 2022

Iran has seen mass protests before. In 2009, the Green Movement threatened the regime after a disputed election. In 2022, nationwide protests erupted following the death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman who died in morality-police custody after being detained for allegedly violating Iran’s hijab rules. Each time, the regime survived.

Several factors suggest this moment is different.

Iran protests surge amid Trump’s stark warning

First, the economy is far worse. Iran faces sustained currency devaluation, unemployment, and inflation that has crushed the middle class and hollowed out state legitimacy. That pressure is compounded by a deepening water crisis that has crippled agriculture, strained urban life, and fueled unrest in multiple provinces. Economic despair is no longer peripheral; it now sits at the center.

Beyond economics, Iran’s external deterrence has eroded. The war with Israel in 2025 inflicted real damage. Senior Iranian commanders were killed. Air defenses were penetrated. Missile and drone infrastructure was disrupted. Iran’s aura of invulnerability—carefully cultivated over decades—was badly shaken.

Collapse of Iranian regime would be

At the same time, Iran’s proxy network is under strain. Hamas has been devastated. Hezbollah has suffered significant losses and now faces domestic pressure in Lebanon. The Houthis remain disruptive but isolated. Tehran’s so-called ‘axis of resistance’ looks less like an unstoppable force and more like a series of costly liabilities.

Most importantly, the regime’s coercive apparatus is under stress. And this is where the future of Iran will be decided.

Watch the IRGC and the Basij—the outcome may hinge on their choices

No institutions matter more right now than the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and its paramilitary arm, the Basij.

Often described as the regime’s ‘eyes and ears,’ the Basij are not a conventional military force but a nationwide population-control and internal surveillance network. Embedded in neighborhoods, universities, factories, and mosques, they monitor dissent, identify protest organizers, and move quickly to intimidate or detain them—often before demonstrations can spread. 

Iran Protests: Vehicles burn as anti-regime unrest spreads across nation

During past unrest, including the 2009 Green Movement and the 2022 Mahsa Amini protests, Basij units played a central role in suppressing resistance through beatings, arrests, and close coordination with IRGC security forces. Their value to the regime lies not in battlefield strength, but in omnipresence and ideological loyalty.

Their mission is to control dissent at the local level—before it becomes national. As long as the Basij remain loyal and effective in towns, neighborhoods, and campuses, the regime can contain unrest. If they hesitate, defect, or stand aside, Tehran’s grip weakens rapidly.

Dan Hoffman: Iran is

The Basij are the real instrument of population control. If the regime is forced to deploy the IRGC widely for internal order, it signals that local control has failed—and that the system is under far greater strain.

The Trump administration should be careful not to hand Tehran the propaganda victory it wants. Loud declarations about regime change from Washington risk delegitimizing Iranian voices. Support the people. Isolate the killers. Let the regime own its crimes.

The IRGC, by contrast, controls the military and functions as an economic empire. Beyond internal security, the IRGC also shapes Iran’s foreign policy—overseeing missile forces, regional proxies, and external operations. It exists to defend the revolution abroad, while the Basij exists to control society at home.

Over the past three decades, the IRGC has embedded itself in Iran’s most important industries—energy, construction, telecommunications, transportation, ports, and black-market finance. Entire sectors of the Iranian economy now depend on IRGC-controlled firms and foundations.

Iranian American praises Trump

This creates a decisive tension. On one hand, the IRGC has every reason to defend the regime that enriched it. On the other, prolonged instability, sanctions, and economic collapse threaten the very assets the Guards control. At some point, self-preservation may begin to compete with ideological loyalty.

That is why Iran’s future may depend less on what protesters do in the streets—and more on whom the IRGC ultimately chooses to back.

Three outcomes appear plausible.

The first is repression. The Basij could maintain local control while the IRGC backs the Supreme Leader, allowing the regime to crush dissent, and impose order through overwhelming force. This would preserve the Islamic Republic, but at the cost of deeper isolation and long-term decay.

Trump weighs US action on Iran as Democrats slam his foreign policy

The second is continuity without clerical dominance. A ‘soft coup’ could sideline aging clerics in favor of a military-nationalist leadership that preserves core power structures while shedding the regime’s most unpopular religious figures. The system would remain authoritarian—but altered.

The third is fracture. If parts of the Basij splinter or stand aside—and the IRGC hesitates to intervene broadly—the regime’s internal control could unravel quickly. This is the least likely outcome, but the most transformative—and the one most favorable to long-term regional stability.

Revolutions tend to succeed not because crowds grow larger, but because security forces eventually stop obeying orders.

America’s strategic objective: clarity without ownership

The United States must be disciplined about its goal.

America should not seek to ‘run Iran,’ redraw its culture, or impose a leader. That approach has failed elsewhere. But neither should Washington pretend neutrality between an abusive theocracy and a population demanding dignity.

Our strategy is clear:

Prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

End Iran’s export of terrorism and proxy war.

Push Iran toward regional stability rather than disruption.

Encourage a government that derives legitimacy from its people, not coercion.

Achieving that outcome requires pressure without provocation.

What the Trump administration and allies should do now

First, expose repression relentlessly. Iran’s internet blackouts are a weapon. The U.S. and allies should support every lawful means of keeping Iranians connected and atrocities visible.

Second, target the regime’s enforcers—not the public. Sanctions should focus on specific IRGC units, Basij commanders, judges, and security officials responsible for killings and mass arrests. Collective punishment only strengthens regime propaganda.

Third, signal consequences—and off-ramps. Those ordering violence must know they will be held accountable. Those who refuse unlawful orders should know the world is watching—and remembering.

Fourth, deter external escalation. Tehran may try to unify the nation through confrontation abroad. Strong regional missile defense, maritime security, and allied coordination reduce the regime’s ability to change the subject with war.

Finally, do not hand Tehran the propaganda victory it wants. Loud declarations about regime change from Washington risk delegitimizing Iranian voices. Support the people. Isolate the killers. Let the regime own its crimes.

The bottom line

Iran’s rulers believe they are carrying out divine will. That makes them dangerous—and stubborn. But it does not make them immortal.

Every revolutionary regime eventually faces a moment when fear stops working, money runs out, and loyalty fractures. Iran may be approaching that moment now.

The outcome will not be decided by speeches in Washington, but by choices in Tehran—especially inside the IRGC.

If the Guards conclude their future lies with the people rather than the clerics, Iran could finally turn a page. If they do not, repression will prevail—for a time.

America’s task is not to force history, but to shape the conditions under which it unfolds—with care, strategy, and moral clarity.

Because when the Islamic Republic finally faces its reckoning, the world must be ready—not to occupy Iran, but to ensure that what replaces the tyranny is not simply the same regime in a different uniform.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Philadelphia Eagles took a three-point lead over the San Francisco 49ers into halftime of their wild-card matchup, but the first half wasn’t without sideline drama for the reigning Super Bowl champions.

After the Eagles were forced to punt after a three-and-out possession, their head coach, Nick Sirianni, sprinted down the sideline to confront wide receiver A.J. Brown. Fox cameras caught Sirianni and Brown jawing back and forth at each other before Eagles senior advisor to the general manager ‘Big Dom’ DiSandro stepped in to separate the two.

Quarterback Jalen Hurts had targeted Brown on his two throws immediately prior to Philadelphia’s punt near the end of the first half. Despite both throws landing near the wideout, Brown was unable to come away with a reception on either play.

After the ensuing punt, the Eagles managed to prevent the 49ers from scoring before halftime. That kept the reigning champs ahead with a 13-10 lead with 30 minutes to play in the final NFC wild-card game.

‘Emotions, they run high, especially in the playoffs,’ Sirianni said of the confrontation, per Fox sideline reporter Erin Andrews. ‘We’re just fine, thanks.’

Brown had been the subject of several off-the-field storylines during the regular season. The Eagles’ star wide receiver publicly aired several grievances about his usage on social media and on a video game livestream on the website Twitch.tv. Brown said he was ‘struggling’ and told fantasy managers with him on their teams to drop him, all while playing as the Eagles in the Madden NFL video game and quipping about getting himself the ball in the simulated game.

Philadelphia’s lead wideout ended the 2025 regular season with 78 catches for 1,003 yards and seven touchdowns.

Brown finished the first half against the 49ers with three catches on five targets for 25 yards on Jan. 11.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford played every offensive snap of his team’s 34-31 wild-card win over the Carolina Panthers but wasn’t quite at 100% while doing so.

Stafford suffered an injury to his throwing hand while attempting a pass at the end of the first half. The 37-year-old quarterback banged his hand on D.J. Wonnum’s arm while trying to follow through.

Stafford immediately recoiled in pain after the play and doubled over on the ground, clutching his hand.

Stafford was able to stay in the game despite the injury and immediately flashed a thumbs-up to Sean McVay after the play. Nonetheless, the veteran quarterback endured some uncharacteristic struggles with his accuracy throughout the third quarter, leading many to wonder about the severity of his potential injury.

Here’s what to know about Stafford’s hand as the Rams start to look ahead toward the NFL’s divisional round.

Report: X-rays negative on Matthew Stafford’s injured finger

NFL Media’s Ian Rapoport reported Sunday morning that Stafford had X-rays on his injured finger.

“X-rays were negative,’ Rapoport said while discussing Stafford’s injury. ‘[He] did not suffer a dislocation. Really, just got it bent back really bad.’

The Rams have yet to comment on Stafford’s injury as of Sunday evening.

Report: Matthew Stafford set for tests on injured finger

The Rams have not provided an update on Stafford’s condition as of Sunday morning.

Matthew Stafford comments on injury

Stafford was asked about his hand injury during a postgame news conference. He told reporters he ‘got a finger bent back’ on the play in question, which led to his reaction on the field.

‘They saw it on the TV on the sideline or whatever. I didn’t obviously know exactly what had happened,’ Stafford explained. ‘It wasn’t pleasant. It wasn’t great.’

Stafford didn’t seem overly worried about the injury being a long-term issue for him.

‘We’ll see what it is,’ Stafford said. ‘I was obviously able to finish the game and throw it decent. Once the ball’s snapped, the adrenaline’s pretty good. So we’ll hopefully just keep it going.’

Nonetheless, Stafford’s practice status will warrant monitoring as the Rams prepare for their divisional-round playoff game.

Who is the Rams backup QB?

If Stafford’s injury ends up being worse in severity than initially anticipated, Los Angeles would turn to Jimmy Garoppolo to lead it as the team chases a Super Bowl.

Garoppolo, 34, is in his second season with the Rams. He didn’t attempt a pass this season but went 0-1 as a starter for Sean McVay’s squad last year while completing 27 of 41 passes for 334 yards, two touchdowns and an interception.

Garoppolo has started 64 games across his 12 NFL seasons since being a second-round pick by the New England Patriots in the 2014 NFL Draft. The Eastern Illinois product has a 43-21 career record across those starts and helped lead the San Francisco 49ers to Super Bowl 54. They lost that game 31-20 to the Kansas City Chiefs in what was Patrick Mahomes’ first career Super Bowl win.

Rams QB depth chart

The Rams have three quarterbacks on their 53-man roster. Below is a look at the pecking order within the group:

  1. Matthew Stafford
  2. Jimmy Garoppolo
  3. Stetson Bennett IV

Bennett was a fourth-round pick in the 2023 NFL draft. He played collegiately at Georgia and helped lead the Bulldogs to two national championships.

Bennett has not yet played a snap at the NFL level but was designated the team’s emergency third quarterback for the team’s wild-card win over the Panthers.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Trump administration’s renewed interest in tapping Venezuela’s mineral reserves could carry with it ‘serious risk,’ an expert on illicit economies has warned in the wake of the capture of Nicolás Maduro.

A day after the U.S. military captured Maduro in Caracas, Trump administration officials highlighted their interest in the country’s critical mineral potential.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters on Jan. 4, ‘You have steel, you have minerals, all the critical minerals. They have a great mining history that’s gone rusty,’ he said aboard Air Force One alongside President Donald Trump.

Lutnick also said that Trump ‘is going to fix it and bring it back – for the Venezuelans.’

‘Venezuela’s gold, critical mineral and rare earth potential is substantial, which makes mining resources very much on the menu for Trump,’ Bram Ebus told Fox News Digital.

‘But this illicit economy involves extreme violence,’ he said, before describing abuses that include forced labor, criminal control of mining zones and punishments such as ‘hands being cut off for theft.’

Ebus cautioned that without strict safeguards, transparency and security, Trump’s efforts to tap Venezuela’s mineral wealth could entangle the U.S. in criminal networks.

‘The sector is already dominated by transnational crime syndicates, deeply implicated in human rights abuses, and intertwined with Chinese corporate interests,’ Ebus, the founder of Amazon Underworld, a research collective covering organized crime, said. ‘If corporations or foreign private security firms were to become directly involved in mining in Venezuela’s Amazon region, the situation could deteriorate rapidly and violently.’

Despite the renewed focus on oil and mineral wealth, ‘when it comes to mining, the situation is more complex than oil,’ Ebus added. ‘The illicit extraction of gold, tungsten, tantalum, and rare earth elements is largely controlled by Colombian guerrilla organizations, often working in collaboration with corrupt Venezuelan state security forces. Much of this output currently ends up in China.’

Ebus also described dire conditions inside mining zones. ‘Mining districts are effectively run by criminal governance,’ he explained. ‘Armed groups decide who can enter or leave an area, tax legal and illegal economic activity, and enforce their own form of justice.’ He also described how ‘punishments for breaking rules can include expulsion, beatings, torture or death.’

‘We have documented summary executions, decapitations, and severe physical mutilation, such as hands being cut off for theft,’ he added. ‘Sexual exploitation, forced labor, and torture are widespread with crimes not limited to non-state actors.’ 

He also noted that ‘Venezuelan state forces, including the army, National Guard, and intelligence services are deeply involved and work in direct collaboration with organized crime groups.’

Ebus described how Colombia’s largest guerrilla organizations, including the ELN and factions such as the Segunda Marquetalia, along with Venezuelan organized crime groups operating locally – or ‘sistemas’ – dominate illegal mining operations, noting that ‘there are at least five major ‘sindicatos’ operating across Bolívar state alone.’

‘Together, all these actors make up the core criminal panorama of Venezuela’s mining sector,’ Ebus added.

In 2016, Maduro established the Orinoco Mining Arc, a 111,843-square-kilometer zone rich in gold, diamonds, coltan and other minerals.

The area has since become synonymous with illicit mining and corrupt officials.

In 2019, the U.S. sanctioned Venezuelan gold exports with at least 86% of the country’s gold reportedly being produced illegally and often controlled by criminal gangs.

However, from a U.S. perspective, Ebus said, the objective behind critical minerals could be limiting China’s access.

‘With gold prices expected to peak around 2026, access to gold represents a major benefit for national economies and government investment stability,’ he said. ‘Beyond gold, controlling critical mineral supply chains offers enormous geopolitical leverage for the U.S., especially if it allows it to deny access to China.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The No. 1-ranked UConn women’s basketball team started slow but, after a big second quarter, cruised to a 95-55 victory over Creighton in Omaha, Nebraska on Sunday, Jan. 11.

Sarah Strong had her fifth double-double of the season with 18 points and 13 rebounds. The sophomore forward added six assists and five steals.

‘I am not really thinking about the game, I am just sort of out there, making reads, seeing what the game gives me and playing off my teammates,’ Strong said postgame when asked about her stat line.

Blanca Quiñonez added 15 points and Azzi Fudd 14 for UConn (17-0, 8-0 Big East). The Huskies continued their dominating defense with 15 steals and 26 points off turnovers. But, UConn also committed an uncharacteristic 21 turnovers.

Ava Zediker had 23 points and Grace Boffeli nine rebounds to lead Creighton (7-10, 3-5 Big East).

UConn is 13-0 all-time vs. Creighton.

What time is UConn vs. Creighton?

The UConn Huskies play the Creighton Bluejays at 2 p.m. ET Sunday, Jan. 10, at the CHI Health Center in Omaha, Nebraska.

UConn vs. Creighton: TV, streaming

  • Date: Sunday, Jan. 11
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET (1 p.m. CT)
  • Location: CHI Health Center (Omaha, Nebraska)
  • TV: truTV
  • Stream: Fubo
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After two losses to start the SEC season, the No. 12-ranked LSU women’s basketball team bounced back in a big way by handing No. 2-ranked Texas its first loss of the season. The Tigers upended the Longorns 70-65 Sunday, Jan. 11 at Pete Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Mikaylah Williams had 20 points to lead five Tigers in double figures. Flau’jae Johnson, Jada Richard, ZaKiyah Johnson and MiLaysia Fulwiley added 10 points each. LSU (16-2, 2-2 SEC) led by as many as 13 points.

Madison Booker had 24 points, and Kyla Oldacre tallied 16 points and 16 rebounds for Texas (18-1, 3-1 SEC). Rori Harmon, who usually pairs with Booker for a Longhorns’ one-two punch, was held to two points.

“They were tougher than us today. This was our worst performance of the year.” Texas coach Vic Shaefer said.

Last week, after back-to-back SEC losses following a 14-0 start, it was LSU coach Kim Mulkey talking about toughness.

‘We’re not tough enough,’ Mulkey said after a loss to then-No. 12 Vanderbilt Commodores.

‘Toughness is either you have it, or you don’t, and we’re not tough enough. And that’s all the players in the locker room tonight. You’re not tough enough to make a play when you need it. You’re not tough enough to get that rebound when we need it. It’s not just one or two. It’s the whole locker room at different times.’

What a difference a week makes. LSU seems to have taken their coach’s message to heart.

Meghan L. Hall contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY